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(This page brings together information about SIL-UND which is especially important
to students who attend UND during the regular academic year.
Much of the information is also available elsewhere on the
SIL-UND website.)
The Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL)
has offered linguistics courses at UND for over half a century.
Beginning in 1952 at the university's invitation,
SIL is an integral part of UND's summer session.
SIL courses can be used toward degrees at UND,
especially the M.A. in Linguistics
and the B.A. and M.A. in
English
(with concentration in language and linguistics).
(An undergraduate minor in linguistics is under development.)
They are designed to
prepare students to do field work in little-studied languages, with
emphasis on analytical skills, field methods,
theoretical frameworks that have proven especially useful in the analysis and
description of such languages,
and related fields such as sociolinguistics and literacy.
Most SIL students are on campus only during the summer,
but regular year-round UND students are welcome.
SIL offers similar courses at
several other locations
around the world.
It also conducts an
international program of linguistic research,
literacy, translation, and other types of language development in approximately 1300 languages
spoken in over 80 countries.
The SIL-UND faculty consists primarily of people
with doctoral degrees in
linguistics from a variety of universities,
most with extensive field experience.
Many spend nine months each year in the field doing research
under the auspices of SIL.
Some teach regularly at other universities
and have no formal association with SIL
except for the SIL program at UND.
All serve with no remuneration from the University.
The SIL program is usually housed in the Johnstone-Fulton-Smith dormitory
complex, which provides space for faculty and staff
offices, a reading room and a childcare program
as well as living accommodations for
students and staff.
A mailroom, with boxes for all participants, serves
as a communication center to keep the program running smoothly and
efficiently.
All students in SIL classes, whether living in the dormitory or not, have
access to offices, mailroom, and other common areas at any time.
Courses
SIL classes are good preparation for a
career in which familiarity with a minority language is very important or
essential, such as linguistics, Bible translation, anthropology, missions,
language development, or community-based literacy.
The courses meet all
standards for UND credit,
are regularly updated to reflect
the current state of the field, and provide a solid foundation for
doctoral study in linguistics at other institutions.
The SIL session lasts nine weeks,
from early June to early August (see dates).
The courses are designed to be intensive and challenging.
Students taking full loads should expect to spend 3-4 hours
per day in class
and 4-6 hours per day outside of class; in addition,
there is generally some homework on weekends.
Some courses, notably Second Language Acquisition and Field Methods,
have special sessions outside of regularly-scheduled class hours
working individually or in small groups with speakers of other languages.
SIL teachers are readily available to answer questions and discuss assignments
during daily office hours (afternoons or evenings).
Many SIL courses are grouped
into integrated packages.
The content of courses in each set is interrelated and work loads are coordinated.
Although the courses may be taken separately or in different combinations, it is
recommended that the courses be taken in the standard packages
because of the coordination within each set.
This is especially important for the language and linguistics (introductory) Package A.
Application, registration and fees
All SIL students, including those on campus during the regular school year,
should apply directly to SIL each year,
so that SIL has adequate staffing to meet
student needs and so that students can be informed about when and where
to meet for registration and classes, etc.
At 8:30 on Monday, the day before classes begin, there is an obligatory orientation meeting to explain
how the SIL program works.
This is important both for those who are coming to UND just for the summer and for those who
are year-round students,
as the program is somewhat different from what both groups expect.
Call the SIL office (777-0575) the week before to find out the location of this meeting.
This is followed immediately by registration for classes.
If for some reason you must register with UND earlier,
please contact the SIL-UND registrar
for permission to register.
All tuition and fees for courses taught by SIL are paid directly to SIL,
not to UND.
(This is part of the agreement between UND and SIL,
since this is SIL's primary source of funding for the program.
In fact, because of subsidies from SIL International,
it is generally the case that SIL fees are appreciably lower than
what one would have to pay to the university.)
If you receive a bill from UND for SIL courses,
please do not pay it but bring it to SIL's attention
so that we can have the charges reversed.
Housing, meals, and extracurricular activities
SIL operates a cooperative housing program
in a UND dormitory facility (usually Johnstone, Fulton, and/or Smith),
which is available to all students and staff of SIL-UND.
Housing costs are kept
low by each dormitory student contributing one hour of work each day to the program.
Most SIL participants eat their meals at Wilkerson Hall at special negotiated rates.
Application for housing and meals is made
after acceptance into the SIL program.
The opportunity to live, work, eat, and play together fosters a
strong sense of community among students and staff, one of the positive
aspects of the program.
Those who choose to live and/or eat elsewhere, however, are
still welcome to participate fully in all other aspects of the program,
including social and extracurricular activities.
Special arrangements are
made whenever necessary to ensure that students living outside the dorm have full
access to all instructional resources.
SILers who share similar religious
backgrounds get together regularly in the dormitories for nonsectarian
religious expression, but such activities are always optional;
students are free to participate or not, as they prefer.
Group sports, especially
volleyball, soccer, and ultimate frisbee, also have wide participation.
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